Title: Measurable Annual Goals
1Measurable Annual Goals Objectives
- Presented by Kathy Gomes
- Regional SETRC PDS
- (518) 581-3731
- kgomes_at_wswheboces.org
2Participants will be able to
- Write measurable annual goals and objectives or
benchmarks when needed - Identify reasons and tools for monitoring and
reporting student progress on IEP goals
3Why are Measurable Goals Important?
- They are required by Federal New York State
law - If an IEP does not include them it is defective
and open to a challenge that it denies FAPE
(target for a hearing) - Goals provide a roadmap for instruction and
monitoring student progress
4An Annual Goal is
- A statement of knowledge, skills or behaviors a
student is expected to be able to demonstrate
within the year - must address the students individual needs as
identified in the PLP. - focus on off-setting or reducing the learning
behavioral problems resulting from disability
5How many goals?
- What is reasonable given the childs abilities
rate of progress? - Write goals for the identified priority need
areas, not for every curriculum topic
6Key ?s for choosing goals
- What does the PLP say?
- What needs cross multiple content areas and
settings? - What needs must be addressed to prepare the
student to enter the general education
school-aged program?
7Quality Matters!
- A goal can have all of the required parts and
still not be measurable. So - beware of fill in the box goals
8What makes goals measurable?
- Clarity of language describing what the student
will DO. - -observable behavior
- -conditions for performance are identified
- (e.g. given one verbal prompt)
- - avoid vague language and jargon
9Observable? . Or Not?
- Point to
- Circle
- Spell orally
- List in writing
- Read orally
- Walk
- Count blocks
- Eat
- Understand
- Know
- Grasp the meaning of
- Remember
- Realize
- Enjoy
- Be familiar with
- Participate in
Will you know it when you see it?
10What makes goals measurable?
- Evaluation plan is identified, including
- -criteria
- -procedure for evaluation
- -schedule for evaluation
11Criteria how well must the student perform?
- accuracy, duration, frequency, speed, distance,
of trials, by when - Goals may need gt 1 criteria
- with 3 or fewer errors for 3 consec. trials
- 85 accuracy over 5 consecutive trials
12Criteria Some Suggestions
- Start with the PLP / baseline data
- Be realistic, but aim high
- Match criteria to the behavior
- Keep independence in mind
- Keep safety in mind
13Procedure for Evaluation how will you measure
progress?
- Examples
- Standardized assessment (name it)
- Scoring of work sample using a rubric
- Curriculum-Based Measurement probe
- Observation with behavior checklist
- Review of ______ data
14Schedule for Evaluation When will the
evaluation occur?
- Examples
- Daily
- Weekly
- Monthly
- Once per quarter
- Every 5 weeks
- On January 5, March 15 and June 3
15The Schedule is NOT
- When you will report progress to the parent
(this goes in a separate section of the IEP) - By June 2008
16What makes goals measurable?
- Clarity of what the student will DO.
- Evaluation plan is clearly identified.
17Chart Goal Template
18Goal
19PLP Mike reads 4th grade material at 50-70 wpm
with 4-6 errors.
20A Transition Goal
- Sue will complete her assigned tasks while at her
community work site with at least a 4 out of 5
rating each week, for 10 weeks, as evaluated by
task scoring rubric completed by job coach,
weekly.
How is this better than saying job coach
observation ?
21- Beware of the terms
- ? increase ?decrease ?improve
- when used on their own, they are too vague to be
measurable - If using these terms, a start and end level of
performance are needed - e.g. improve from 5
words per minute to 25 WPM.
22Objectives and Benchmarks
- Required only for preschool students with a
disability and school-aged students eligible for
the NYSAA
23Objectives and Benchmarks
- Objectives The intermediate knowledge, skills
and/or behaviors that must be learned in order to
reach the annual goal. Objectives break down the
skills into discrete components. (Task analysis) - Benchmarks The major milestones that a student
will demonstrate to lead to the annual goal.
Benchmarks usually designate a target time period
for the behavior to occur. They may coincide
with reporting periods.
24Annual Goal Benchmarks
- Annual Goal Alexis will sit on her assigned
spot during circle time for 10 minutes daily
without prompting, for 2 consec. weeks, as
evaluated by observation with charting of time
and prompts, daily. - Benchmark 1 By October 31, Alexis will sit on
her assigned spot during circle time for 3
minutes daily with verbal prompting - Benchmark 2 By January 3, Alexis will sit on
her assigned spot during circle time for 5
minutes daily with verbal prompting - Benchmark 3 By March 1, Alexis will sit on her
assigned spot during circle time for 5 minutes
daily without prompting
25Make Social Goals Measurable
- Whats wrong with these goals?
- Sue will demonstrate an increase in social
skills, 90 success over 10 months, teacher
observation, by June. - Mike will demonstrate improved peer relationships
8 out of 10 free play opportunities, staff
observation, quarterly.
26Make Social Goals Measurable
- What observable behavior will demonstrate the
change in attitude, feeling, etc.? - For Example, improved social skills may be
demonstrated by - number of peer interactions
- time engaged in conversation
- choice of play activities
27Making Social Goals Measurable will improve
peer relationships becomes
28Why Monitor Progress?
- Federal and NY State law require that you report
progress to the parent - How will you report progress if you dont measure
it? - Progress or lack of progress should inform
instructional decisions
29How to Monitor Progress
- Do what you committed to when writing the goals
- Use the assessment process identified
- Follow the evaluation schedule
- Track the data
30Progress Monitoring Example
- Annual Goal Tom will have an initial sound
fluency of 8 per minute, as measured using a 1
minute picture-based probe, weekly.
31Progress Informs Instruction -Establish a Goal
Line
X
Goal LSF 8
Baseline point
Goal Line
32Progress Informs Instruction -Establish a Goal
Line
X
Goal Line
33Trend Line ShowsProgress at Goal Line
X
Goal Line
Trend Line
Student is making sufficient progress to meet goal
34Progress Greater than Goal Line
X
Trend Line
Goal Line
Increase goal or complete early move on to
other goals
35Progress below Goal Line
X
Goal Line
Trend Line
Modify Instruction (more time, new method, etc.)
36Monitoring Reporting
- Report must be based on data collected
- Statements such as student is doing well or is
making progress are subjective and open to
interpretation
37Tools for Progress Reporting
- Computerized Charting Graphing
- Microsoft Office charting tools
- Chart dog (www.interventioncentral.org)
- Behavior Reporter Behavior Report Card Generator
(www.interventioncentral.org) - Photocopier
- Provide copies of data charts
(preferably with a written
explanation)
38(No Transcript)
39Data Dos and Donts
- Do improve data reliability by
- Clearly stating evaluation conditions, procedure
and schedule - Training staff responsible for data collection
40Data Dos and Donts
- Dont draw conclusions based on too few data
points - Dont wait too long to make an
instructional change if there is
no progress
41Data the Annual Review
- Use the goal progress data youve collected all
year to update the PLP - Has the goal been accomplished, or does it need
to continue into the following year as is, or
with changes?
42Whats Your Action Plan?
- Evaluate the goals in your IEPs
- Evaluate your data
- Experiment with charting tools
- Evaluate your progress reports
- Arrange for staff training
43THANK YOU
Your commitment will help many children become
happy, healthy, and successful individuals.